FlipToons was designed by Renato Simões and Jordy Adan, the latter of whom gave us Stonespine Architects and Cartographers, but the real star of the show is Diego Sá, whose animated characters make me want to rate the game significantly higher than I would otherwise. Just look at those little dudes! The camel is two seconds away from winding up a punch. The rabbit wouldn’t feel out of place leaning in for a kiss, only to be rebuffed when the ostrich hides her head in the sand. The sheep is just is out there boppin’ to her tunes.
As a game? Oh, it’s pretty good. Clever at points, nice to play, the usual. My larger reservation is the way it makes me feel during and after a play.
Six cards. In theory.
FlipToons is a game of two halves. Two halves which, when hinged like an aquatic bivalve, form into a united whole that conceals an unexpectedly tasty muscle within. Okay, so I skipped breakfast. Point is, FlipToons is hard to discuss holistically without first establishing how its components function apart from one another.
The first part is the deck. When the game begins, you have six cards in total. Two caterpillars, each worth bupkis, but easily dismissed. One skunk, a utility card for winnowing your deck. One bee, worth a single pip of purchasing power. One snail, worth double the bee’s value, making it the single most precious card in your starting lineup. And one dragonfly. Ah, the dragonfly. This guy gives you one point for every unique adjacent card.
What this means requires some explanation. Every round opens with you shuffling your deck and then dealing cards onto the table in front of you to create a three-by-two grid. If you have extra cards, too bad, they remain in your hand. If you have too few cards… well, don’t do that.
Some cards may stack. Rabbits, ostriches, turkeys, these are your chance to get more than six cards into your grid at a time. Others, like sheep or monkeys, trigger benefits if they occupy a particular row or column. Some cards flip, others compare values against other players or the market, and a few, like the pig, are traps that can be gifted to rivals to subtract from their tally.
That tally, then, is taken to the market to shape your deck. Since you’ll only use six-ish cards at a time, keeping your cast trim is a good idea. Fortunately, unlike most deck-builders, the ability to dismiss toons is inbuilt in FlipToons, always available for the low cost of five points.
The toons on display, meanwhile, adjust in cost according to their relative ranking. This ensures that something is always available, and if you’re lucky it’s possible for something unusually precious to slip down in cost. Of course, the opposite often also proves true, with low-value cruft sometimes overwhelming the market.
Regardless, you take your purchases and/or dismissals, shuffle your grid back into your hand, and begin all over again. Bit by bit, your cast improves. That measly starting five to six points becomes twelve, then sixteen, then you break twenty and flip your little tally card to its opposite side. The goal is to score thirty.
Costs are adjusted dynamically, which can result in little surprises.
Okay, not quite. Your actual goal is to score the most on the final round. Hitting a tally of thirty is how you trigger the endgame, and there’s a small plus-three advantage if you’re the one to bring it about, but that’s no guarantee luck will be on your side for the last flip. So, then: hit thirty to lock the game into one final pull of the lever, then hit the jackpot.
The slot-machine analogy is apt here. FlipToons is to deck-building what Balatro was to poker. The titular flip of FlipToons is devoid of decision points. You turn cards in order, left to right and top to bottom, until you’ve produced that three-by-two grid.
There’s more going on in the market portion, but these are minor choices rather than a vast menu. There are five cards available at any given moment, and even when you’re flush with cash in the late-game, you’re limited to two purchases. (And dismissing a card from your deck qualifies, so no double-dipping.) This keeps everyone at the table more or less bungee-corded at the hip, which is probably the right decision for such a light game, but also prevents the table from launching the exponential bottle rockets that were Balatro’s core pleasure.
But about those pleasures…
I have my reservations about these sorts of games. The art and market purchases, while pleasant, aren’t far removed from the lights, illusory choices, and “theming” of a slot machine. I remember as a kid on a trip to Vegas, walking past a slot machine that leaped out of the crowd. I think it was based on Aliens, with those sleek oily monsters I had yet to witness on the screen for myself, but which my friends with the cool parents, the ones who let their kids watch R-rated movies in elementary school, spoke of as the scariest things they’d ever seen. My Dad traced the object of my interest and leaned down to whisper, “That’s how they get you.” It was like somebody had roused me from hypnosis. In that moment, my Dad — who suddenly struck me as cooler than those other dads, or at least cannier — had broken through the social programming of that cigarette-reeking hellhole.
And, look, I don’t think FlipToons is some sort of evil artifact. It isn’t the equivalent of a casino, with its fine-tuned odds to ensure the house always wins and your kid’s college fund becomes another rounding error in a billionaire’s high score. But it produces a similar daze, all submersion and dulled perception. It’s a far cry, too, from some of the sharper auto-battler board games, titles like Tag Team, with its emphasis on attention and preemption, or One-Hit Heroes, which requires constant input from its players. Here, the gameplay comes pre-loaded. All you have to do is pull the lever.
It doesn’t always take much effort to reach those 30 points.
I mean, there’s more to it than that. Just not by as much as I would prefer. Certainly not by enough to make me want to play it more.
Because in the end, FlipToons is a pleasant enough diversion. It’s well-crafted, pretty to look at, and feels good to play. When it hits the table, the fugue it offers is dreamy and warm. But when it’s done, I feel like I binged on steakhouse butter in place of an actual filet. It lacks what brought me to the table in the first place. It doesn’t spark my imagination or help me appreciate my friends. It doesn’t teach me anything. It barely even makes a win feel different from a loss. Most of the time, I hardly remember how I spent the past twenty minutes.
But yeah, the art is lovely. Those lovable goofballs. Those scamps. That’s how they get you.
A complimentary copy of FlipToons was provided by the publisher.
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Cross Bronx Expressway, GMT’s third release in the Irregular Conflicts series, is not for the weak. It is exceptionally complicated, even by the elevated standards of a COIN title. A frequent refrain amongst the GMT faithful, and an accurate refrain at that, is that the rules aren’t all that complicated once you get over the hump of learning them. Not so here. For my first game, I gathered three of the finest gaming minds in New York City, all of whom had read the rules in advance, and it still took an hour or two to get things started. This is no doubt in part a function of the theme, the civic management of The Bronx across the latter half of the 20th century. It’s easier to keep rules in your head when they don’t use words like “coalition,” “partner organization,” and “Census Round Audit.” You may find yourself scratching your head and wondering why you didn’t go back to school to get an MB(oard game)A.
Work your way past the daunting exterior and you’ll find a game that is a fascinating mix of the exceptionally confrontational and the utterly inscrutable. Cross Bronx Expressway is a hard game to talk about as a game, in part because the gamic elements are relatively slight in view of the whole. Designer…
The American Tabletop Awards, an awards scheme launched seven years ago with the aim of being the US equivalent of Germany’s Spiel des Jahres, has unveiled its 2026 winners.
ATTA’s Early Gamers award is focused on titles suitable for younger gamers and players new to modern board gaming, while the Casual Games awards looks at games suitable for all experience levels that can be played in 30 to 60 minutes.
This year’s Strategy Games prize went to Matt Leacock’s pandemic spinoff The Lord of the Rings: Fate of the Fellowship, while the Complex Games title went to Jo Kelly’s and Cole Wehrle’s design Molly House, which explores the joy and fear experienced by gender-defying Londoners in 18th century society.
CMYK was the standout publisher with two wins out of the four categories. Asmodee studios won one award and picked up three other nominations, while Flatout Games picked up recommendations for both Cascadia Junior and Knitting Circle.
Alex Cutler was the only designer to appear twice among the finalists, scoring a nomination for his co-design Critter Kitchen and a recommendation for co-design A Place For All My Books.
The ATTAs are voted on by members of the US board game media, who each submit up to five games from the previous calendar year, which are then ordered according to ranked-choice vote.
Awards co-founder Eric Yurko, who runs board game review site What’s Eric Playing?, said, “The past few years have been great for games, and 2025 was no exception.
“There were great moments and releases throughout, so we’re very excited to present these awards to the best games we played in 2025.”
Early Gamers Winner: Magical Athlete – designed by Richard Garfield and Takashi Ishida (published by CMYK Games) Nominated: The Sandcastles of Burgundy – Stefan Feld and Susanne Feld (Ravensburger) Nominated: Splendor Kids – Marc André and Catherine André (Space Cowboys / Asmodee) Recommended: Cascadia Junior – Fertessa Allyse and Randy Flynn (Flatout Games) Recommended: Duck and Cover – Oussama Khelifati (Captain Games)
Complex Games Winner: Molly House – Jo Kelly and Cole Wehrle (Wehrlegig Games) Nominated: Tidal Blades 2: Rise of the Unfolders – Tim Eisner and Ben Eisner (Druid City Games) Nominated: Covenant – Germán P Millán (Devir) Recommended: Above and Below: Haunted – Ryan Laukat (Red Raven Games) Recommended: Galactic Cruise – TK King, Dennis Northcott and Koltin Thompson (Kinson Key Games)
Watergate is a two player game about the Watergate scandal involving President Nixon. One player is the newspaper editor trying to gather evidence, link them to Nixon and expose the scandal. The other player is the Nixon administration, trying to prevent this and attempting to win by lasting till the end of the presidential term.
The game board is a network of links with
Sea Salt & Paper sure was hot a couple years back, huh? I didn’t think much of this thing the first time I encountered it, perhaps a symptom of having only played it with a single partner; in contrast to some, I find it needs room to stretch out. Perhaps it helps, too, that the expansions, More Salt and More Pepper, both give the game a small kick in its folded shorts.
The basic choice: from where does one draw?
For those who haven’t played Bruno Cathala and Théo Rivière’s small-box card game, Sea Salt & Paper opens with the gentlest of all possible choices: from where to draw? Your options, in this case, are either the deck proper — in which case you’ll draw a pair, keep one, and toss the reminder into either of two discards — or the top offering from one of those castoff piles. Either way, you gain a single card.
Over the course of multiple turns and multiple sessions, however, this choice begins to take on some depth. First, there’s the possibility of playing a duo. Some cards, when paired with a mate, can be deployed to the table. The pair is worth a point either way, but their coming-out provides some small benefit: crabs that let you dig through a discard pile for something previously buried, boats that start your turn anew, a shark and swimmer that swipe something precious from a rival’s hand.
But while duos are potent, there’s more to your picks than pairing cards. There’s the color of the card, entirely separate from its icon, which can amass points as you gain more of a particular hue. Or there are offerings that pose a risk, like octopuses and penguins, worth nothing at first but gradually accumulating points as you build sets — while, of course, signaling to your opponents that you’re angling for something.
Or there’s the risk of throwing away something worthwhile to the others at the table. More than once, I’ve had to take a worthless shell because Adam, who tends to sit to my left, hoards shells by default. If I throw one out, he’ll nab it for certain. And fortune favoring him, he probably already has three in hand.
This is all to say that Sea Salt & Paper is an unassuming little thing. Its choices are diminutive, but no less crucial for their stature.
Cards in hand are hidden, but vulnerable.
Where the game gets interesting, though, is in its scoring. Played over multiple hands, the objective is to accumulate some number of points. Say, thirty points with four players. But rather than ending any given hand at a certain threshold, here players are allowed to keep playing until somebody elects to go out. And then they’re offered another little choice that bends the proceedings. They can declare the hand is over, at which point everybody scores according to what they’re holding and/or the duos they’ve revealed. Or the goer-outer can announce that they have the high score at the table and nobody can match them.
Aha! The contest is on. And the stakes are high. If the player who went out has the highest score, they earn all their points plus a color bonus, points worth the sum of their highest-held suit. That might be a lot or a little, depending on their priorities that round. Everyone else, meanwhile, earns only a color bonus. Again, that might be a tidy sum, but it will almost certainly be less than their normal score. But if the opposite holds true, the pendulum swings the other way. Everybody else scores their hand points, while the shouty player earns nothing but the color bonus.
Like everything else in Sea Salt & Paper, this decision is understated. But it represents a potentially major swing. I say “potentially” because, well, this is a game of subtle wagers and sudden swings, and it’s entirely possible for somebody to quietly amass a solid bar of colors and come out ahead either way.
This gives it a sleepy atmosphere. I might even call it boring, in a largely pleasant way, the sort of game you play with your grandmother while sharing some light chit-chat. In that regard, it reminds me of something like Mexican Train or countless trick-takers played with a regular deck. It doesn’t exactly knock me out of my socks, but it was never meant for sock-rocking. It’s there for quiet evenings on the seaside, the air heavy with the inrush of atmosphere, a storm coming but still out on the horizon. It’s a bedtime game.
Extra Salt adds a few cards.
The expansions give it some much-needed kick. The first, Extra Salt, adds only a few cards, not enough to upset the delicate ecosystem of the original game, but sufficient to add at least a few decisions. Extras like a lobster or a jellyfish pair with previously-obvious offerings to produce new effects, while a seahorse makes certain sets more worthwhile and starfish can be added to a duo to drop their ability in exchange for some extra points. The game is still sleepy, but the decision-space is a little denser.
Next is Extra Pepper, the more interesting offering. Every round, an event card is drawn that alters the proceedings. A change to how a certain set is formed, a higher scoring threshold, only needing three mermaids to win outright rather than the usual four… that sort of thing. Everybody plays according to this altered rule, but then — and this is the smart bit — then the winning or losing player receives the event card as a permanent addition to their repertoire. This varies by card, with handicaps going to trailing players and hurdles to winners. Either way, the game receives a nudge that corrects toward the median ever so slightly. Or, better yet, allows somebody to manipulate the rules in their favor by tanking an early session to nab something ultra-potent.
In both cases, the expansions benefit the core game by adding a little more to the turn-by-turn proceedings. If I had to identify an issue with the game — which, again, I’m not sure this is the sort of game that bears a deep critique — it’s that the decision-making process is so muffled. There’s a gap between good and bad play, but good and great play? Eh. I’m not convinced. To their credit, the expansions offer a few more of those small decisions that make it such a pleasant, if still sleepy, game for late nights.
Extra Pepper is more interesting.
On the whole, Sea Salt & Paper is a game that’s nice to play with family, as a filler, or when everybody’s too tired for anything heavier. That’s a crowded field, but, well, this just so happens to be one of the games that’s succeeded in that arena. Call it the king of the sleepers. I doubt Sea Salt & Paper would even take it as an insult.
A complimentary copy of Sea Salt & Paper was provided by the publisher.
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Schon Root hat uns gelehrt, dass wir niedlichen Tierchen nicht trauen sollten. Was ganz harmlos auf Spielkarten abgebildet und ausmodeliert als Holzfiguren auf dem Spielplan steht, das kann auch nur geschickte Tarnung sein. Um uns in ein Spiel zu locken, das dann auf den zweiten Blick und nach dem ersten Spielzug gar nicht mehr so harmlos daherkommt. Das neue Spiel rund um Kartentänze und zu sammelnde Schwerter ist eher im Kennerbereich angesiedelt und hatte für mich eine enorme Einstiegshürde.
Kennt Ihr auch, oder? Ihr macht Euren allerersten Spielzug und wisst genau, dass Ihr schlicht mal so wirklich alles falsch gemacht habt. Zug nachträglich zurücknehmen? Ne, wäre doch blöd. Weil haben wir uns in unserem Blindflug der spielerischen Möglichkeiten schliesslich selbst eingebrockt. Dabei konntet Ihr noch nicht einmal vom Startspieler eine erfolgversprechende Taktik abschauen, dann jeder von Euch hat sein ganz individuelles Set von sechs Startkarten auf der Hand. Die spielen sich alle anders und ganz besonders. Das macht ungezählte Möglichkeiten, mal so richtig in die Grütze zu greifen und aus purer Unwissenheit einen Fehlstart mit Tempoverlust hinzulegen. Denn am Ende geht es doch mal wieder nur um Siegpunkte und alles andere ist nur schön anzusehendes Mittel zum schnöden Zweck.
Aber worum geht es eigentlich und wo sind wir überhaupt? Keine Ahnung, denn in meiner mitgespielten Erstpartie Emberleaf war das Thema leider mal so gar kein Thema. Stattdessen stolperten wir anfangs etwas konfus durchs Regelwerk, was aber auch daran lag, dass noch keiner von uns Spielerfahrung mit an den Dreiertisch gebracht hatte. Also liess ich es ganz entspannt für mich als reine Kennenlernpartie angehen. Einfach mal machen und schon bin ich wieder bei der Spielmechanik angekommen. Die ist recht einfach. Bin ich reihum am Zug, dann spiele ich eine meiner Handkarten in meine persönliche Rasterauslage und führe den Soforteffekt der Karte aus, sofern vorhanden. Alternativ nutze ich den nun abgedeckten Aufdruck meiner Rasterauslage. Was auch immer mir in der aktuellen Situation mehr weiterhilft. Und schon ist der nächste Spieler am Zug.
Emberleaf spielt sich angenehm flott. Ja, wäre da nicht dieser Kartentanz, denn Ihr als alternative Aktion zum Kartenausspielen aufs Parkett legen könnt. Wobei der ganz schnöde „Karten verschieben“ heisst, wie ich später gerafft habe. Der Kartentanz beschreibt nur die Rotation zwischen Eurer Hand und der Auslage. Alles klar, Herr Meister der Abschweifungen? Ihr schiebt also dabei Eure ausliegenden Karten eine Position nach links – in den nächsten Slot des Rasters oder runter vom Raster. Für beide Situationen gibt es Effekte auf den Karten. Auf manchen Karten und ganz verschiedene Effekte, weil da liegt die eigentliche Herausforderung von Emberleaf. Diese Effekte werden ausgeführt und von links nach rechts und immer von oben nach unten arbeitet Ihr so Euer Kartenraster ab. Das können schon mal so sechs Karten dort sein, was dann eben sechs oder mehr Effekte sind im Vergleich zum Ausspielen einer einzigen Karte. Das dauert deshalb etwas länger, und wenn das bis zu vier Mitspieler vor Euch so machen, was im Nebensatz dann auch die maximal mögliche Spielerzahl verrät, dann kann eine Partie schon mal für Euch gefühlt ins Stocken geraten. Zum Glück waren wir nur zu dritt und so hielten sich meine Pausen bei den Mitspielerzügen in enge Grenzen.
Ich hatte allerdings so viel mit mir selbst, sprich meiner Kartenhand und meiner Kartenauslage und potenziellen neue Karten in Form von Helden und Aufträgen sowie der Situation auf dem zentralen Spielbrett zu tun, dass mir keinesfalls langweilig wurde. Stattdessen tüftelte ich meine optimierte Aktionsfolge aus, um doch noch irgendwie meine Pläne umsetzen zu können. Laufen ist toll, aber vorher sollte ich lieber hier bauen, brauche dafür aber noch ein Holz und das will vorab eingesammelt werden. Blöd nur, dass ich die Rasterreihenfolge meiner ausliegenden Karten nicht einfach so durchbrechen kann. Wäre dann auch zu einfach. Wenn die einmal falsch gedacht ausliegen, dann muss ich mit dieser Abarbeitungsreihenfolge in Form des Kartentanzes leben. Wer also schnell seine Karte zurück auf die Hand haben will, sollte die nicht ganz rechts ausspielen. Habe ich auf die harte Tour gelernt. Dann dauert es drei Verschiebe-Aktionen, bis die sich vom Raster zurück auf meine Hand schiebt. Und eventuell war die Sofortaktion beim Ausspielen viel besser als die Aktion beim Verschieben der Karten. Pech gehabt, weil schlecht geplant. Unzureichende Vorplanung bestraft Emberleaf direkt und spürbar. Gut, dass Euer Raster zu Spielbeginn verkürzt, weil mit Startgebäuden belegt ist, die erst noch weggebaut werden wollen.
Im Rückblick und besonders in der Situation betrachtet, empfand ich die Einstiegshürde schon enorm. Ich habe noch keine rechte Ahnung vom Spiel, kenne nur die Spielregeln und soll schon richtungsweisende Entscheidungen treffen. Weil im Idealfall bekomme ich es hin, dass meine Karten-Maschinerie wie geschmiert läuft und eine Kartenaktion in die andere greift. So sähe ein perfektes Spiel aus und davon war ich in meiner Erstpartie arg weit entfernt. Einfach mal machen und so. Tolle Idee, zu vorschnell gedacht und schon steckte ich einige Aktionsrunden fest, weil mir dringend benötigte Rohstoffe fehlten, um eines meiner Gebäude zu bauen, in das ich eine neue Tierart aus meinem Vorrat einziehen lassen kann, was dann wiederum die Aktion auslöst, eine neue Karte aus der offenen Auslage rekrutieren zu können. Hallo Kettenzüge. Ohne Vorausplanung läuft in Emberleaf halt wenig zusammen, aber da wiederhole ich mich. Und genau da liegt auch mein Hauptkritikpunkt an dem optisch so niedlichen Spiel, das im spielerischen Kern eine knallharte Optimieraufgabe ist. Ich prophezeihe, dass Ihr als Erstspieler gegen am Spielbrett erlernte Spielerfahrung keine Chance haben werdet. Ich hätte mir deshalb eine Art von Einsteiger-Kartendeck gewünscht, das etwas mehr unoptimierte Spielweise verzeiht und eventuell noch einen Ratschlag mit auf dem Weg gibt, in welchem Rahmen wir unsere ersten Spielzüge angehen können. Um den kompletten Blindflug zu vermeiden. Frusttoleranz sollte Ihr also mitbringen oder besser noch auf vergleichbarem Erfahrungsniveau Euch in der Welt von Emberleaf bewegen.
So bauen wir mit diversen Rohstoffen, die wir in unserem begrenzten Lager sammeln, diverse Gebäude in diversen Lichtungen des Spielfeldes. Bevölkern diese Gebäude dann mit Holztierchen, die ab sofort und bis Spielende dort wohnen und uns einen Sofortbonus geben, mehr an Sammelsymbolen wie Schwerter oder Holzplanken freispielen oder direkt eine neue Heldenkarte rekrutieren lassen, die dann zwischen Hand und eigenem Kartenraster rotiert. Genau, das ist der Kartentanz. Nebenbei sammeln wir ausliegende Aufträge ein, die uns aber erst am Spielende deren Punkte bringen und die auch erst am Spielende ganz genau erfüllt werden sollen. Ok, in mindestens drei Lichtungen ein Wohnhaus bauen, das kann ich noch recht einfach planen und auch durchziehen. Aber eben genau fünf Heldenkarten ausgespielt zu haben, das erfordert genaues Timing. Tja, und da kommen dann die lieben Mitspieler ins Spiel. Die sind für mich die meiste Zeit leider nur Störfaktoren. Die schnappen mir Helden und Aufträge weg und bekämpfen vor meiner Nase die Wegelagerer-Plättchen per virtuelle Schwerter, um Siegpunkte und Rohstoff-Belohnungen einzusacken. Zudem werden mir Lichtungsplätze mit unpassenden Gebäuden belegt, die ich mal so gar nicht für meine Aufträge dort gebrauchen kann. Diese indirekte Konkurrenz ist überall spürbar. Und bei wem es besonders gut läuft, der ist eben direkt eine noch grössere Konkurrenz, weil dort mehr Aktionen besser ineinander greifen. Bis ich wieder am Zug bin, kann sich eine Menge geändert haben und sogar das Spielende eingeläutet sein.
Auch ja, wir sind übrigens mutige wie einzigartige Emberling, die ihre zerstörte Heimat tief im ältesten Wald der Welt wiederaufbauen wollen. So erforschen wir das Land, wobei es da wenig zu erforschen gibt, weil alles schon offen sichtbar ausliegt. Lasst Euch also nichts erzählen. Wir sammeln ganz viele Ressourcen, die erst zu wenig und dann im Überfluss vorhanden sind, aber von denen stets immer genau ein Rohstoff für den nächsten Zug fehlt. Wir bauen Dörfer auf und rekrutieren neue Helden mit einzigartigen Fähigkeiten. Und diese Fähigkeiten der Helden sind wirklich alle einzigartig und anders und wirken teils unwissend überwältigend. So hatte ich einen Bären ins Spiel gebracht, der aus zwei lumpigen Steinen eine begehrte Honigwabe machen konnte. Klang toll, weil Honig für etliche Startgebäude notwendig ist und später fast egal wird. Ich hatte den viel zu spät rekrutiert und bis zum Spielende kein einziges Mal in seiner Hauptfähigkeit genutzt. Aber da kann das Spiel der Autoren und zeitgleich Illustratoren in Person von James Tomblin und Frank West nichts dafür, wenn ich so dösbatlig aus dem Bauch heraus agiere. Am Ende wurde ich Dritter, obwohl ich im Spielverlauf noch recht gut mithalten konnte. Meine unerfüllbaren Aufträge haben mir das Genick gebrochen. Das Gleichgewicht der Natur habe ich dann wohl nicht wiederherstellen können. Eine Spielerfahrung war es trotzdem wert.
Was taugt nun Emberleaf, das derweil von Skellig Games lokalisiert wurde und seit März 2026 als Retailversion im Handel ist? Retailversion deshalb, weil es noch eine ursprüngliche Kickstarterversion gab. In dem Zuge gab es auch eine Deluxeversion und diverse Erweiterungen wie Ressourcen aus Holz statt Pappe, Kartenraster aus Neopren, diverse Heldenpacks und Eure Spielerfigur in der eigenen Lieblingsfarbe und noch mehr Aufträge, die eigentlich thematisch Gefälligkeiten sind. Ich habe die Retailversion als optisch ausreichend und wirklich schön empfunden. Emberleaf hat eine gewisse Tischpräsenz, die einen mitspielen lassen möchte. Soweit mein positiver Eindruck. Mit der Einstiegshürde und der Falle, seine Kartenhand in unpassener Reihenfolge und an nicht idealer Rasterposition zu spielen, müsst Ihr umgehen können. Oder Ihr nehmt Euch die nötige Bedenkzeit vor Eurem allerersten und entscheidenden Spielzug, was die Gefahr mit sich bringt, dieses Eurogame zu zergrübeln vor lauter Vorplanung, obwohl Ihr den Spielrythmus noch gar nicht einschätzen könnt. Ich persönlich hätte mir mehr direkte Interaktion gewünscht – ob durch die Heldenkarten oder auf dem Spielbrett. Ich habe nur zwei Karten gesehen, bei denen die Mitspieler mitprofitiert hatten. Hier mal gemeinsam zwei Holz einsammeln und dort nacheinander kämpfen dürfen. Das war mir dann doch zu wenig und fühlte sich zu solitär an. Eventuell haben wir vor lauter Unwissenheit auch einfach nur zu sehr nebeneinander hergespielt.
Nochmal mitspielen? Ja, absolut. Nur dann wäre ich wohl derjenige, wer den unfairen Erfahrungsvorteil hätte. Nur kann ich das bequem durch unoptimierte Bauchspieler-Züge locker wieder ausgleichen. Sollte also kein Problem sein. Muss ich Emberleaf hingegen selbst besitzen? Ich glaube eher nicht, weil genauso wie bei Wundersame Wesen und Luthier muss ich nicht jedes schön anzusehende Eurogame selbst besitzen. Dafür fehlte mir dann doch der dauerhaft angespannte Spannungsbogen, während sich die Belohnungen doch nicht interessant genug anfühlten. Einzig die Rekrutierung neuer Heldenkarten war ein wirklicher Höhepunkt, weil eine Überraschung, wie sich diese neuen Karten so ins eigene Deck einfügen werden. Alle Theorie will hier spielerisch erlebt werden und das fand ich gut. Nur kommt diese Rekrutierung pro Mitspieler nur maximal vier Mal im Spiel vor, sodass aus anfänglichen sechs Helden auf der Hand bis zu zehn werden können.
Ist Emberleaf also doch nicht so komplex, wie es anfangs auf mich wirkte? So langsam komme ich ins Grübeln, ob mich zunächst der Niedlichkeitsfaktor und dann nochmal die vielen einzigartigen Helden geblendet haben. Ihr seht mich arg unentschlossen, deshalb macht Euch lieber Euer ganz eigenes Bild im selbsterlebten Partien. Dann mal los mit Euch, denn so richtig verkehrt macht Ihr dann doch nichts mit Emberleaf. Und der Nächste, der das Spiel einfach nur ungespielt niedlich findet, denn solltet Ihr als schnell finden können. Oder doch lieber erstmal irgendwo mitspielen? Als Geheimtipp empfehle ich Euch da die Spiel DOCH! in Dortmund und den SpieleWahnsinn in Herne, sofern Ihr diese Zeilen zeitig vor Ende April 2026 lesen solltet. Ewähnt dann bitte am Skelling Games Messestand, wer Euch dorthin geschickt habt – brettspieltag.de und so. Würde mich freuen, wenn Euch Emberleaf dort eine gute Zeit einbringt. Weil darum geht es doch.
Als Kind habe ich nie einen LÜK-Kasten besessen. Dabei hätte ich so gerne einen gehabt. Erst mit dem vor einigen Jahren veröffentlichten LÜK – Das Spiel hat ein solcher Kasten Einzug in den Haushalt gefunden – als Bestandteil eines überraschend guten Spiels. Für mich bedeutete das quasi die verspätete Erfüllung eines Kindheitstraums. Das Rätselspiel Behind verfolgt nun ein ähnliches Prinzip und hat folglich einen Nerv bei mir getroffen.
Drei unterschiedliche Schwierigkeitsstufen
Die Schachtel beinhaltet drei doppelseitige Puzzle-Rätsel in drei unterschiedlichen Schwierigkeitsstufen. Alle sind alles andere als trivial. Wenn ich die Informationen auf den Teilen der Vorderseite richtig deute und die Teile entsprechend zusammenlege, ergibt auch die Rückseite ein Bild. Das überprüfe ich jedoch erst am Ende eines Rätsels, indem ich jedes einzelne Teil umdrehe.
Auch die Rückzeiten ergeben ein Motiv.
Nun haben die Puzzleteile von Behind nicht die Form klassischer Puzzleteile. Sie weisen keine Nasen und Ausbuchtungen auf, sodass ich schlicht anhand der Form erkennen könnte, was nebeneinander gehört. Hier sind die Puzzleteile viereckig, wie beim LÜK-Kasten. Das Motiv allein muss reichen, um die Lösung zu finden. Jedoch: Viele Teile eines Rätsels geben gar keinen bildlichen Hinweis darauf, was neben ihnen liegt. Was also tun?
Wie ich bei Behind ein Rätsel angehe
Ich fange an, indem ich die Plättchen so aus auslege, dass alle komplett zu sehen sind. Und dann? Die Anweisung zu Beginn ist kurz. Beim Fall „Der Raub“ heißt es beispielsweise: „Ein Raub wurde begangen. Rekonstruiert die Notizen der Ermittler.“ Schnell erkenne ich, dass manche Plättchen zusammengehören, weil Texte oder Grafiken sich ergänzen. Diese zusammenzulegen ist die Pflicht, dann beginnt die Kür: die herausfordernde Aufgabe. Echte Kopfarbeit. Ich versinke im Rätsel und merke nicht, wie die Zeit vergeht.
Ein Puzzleteil aus dem Rätsel „der Professor“.
Wenn am Ende das vollständige Puzzle vor mir liegt, denke ich: „Klar, so muss es aussehen. Warum hat das [beim Blick auf die Uhr] nur solange gedauert, bis es fertig war?“ Es ist wie ein Labyrinth: Steckt man drin, ist der Weg zum Ausgang nicht offensichtlich. Gucke ich von oben auf den Plan, fällt der richtige Weg vergleichsweise schnell ins Auge. So sind Rätsel eben.
Knobeln mit Behind: Mir macht das Spaß
Bei Behind steht die Lösung auf den Puzzleteilen. Ich muss die Texte und Grafiken nur richtig verstehen, die Logik dahinter kapieren und dann einfach machen. Zudem hilft die Form mancher Teilgebilde, um sie im Gesamtkonstrukt richtig zu platzieren. Mir bereitet diese Art der Knobelei Vergnügen – egal, ob ich mich allein daran versuche oder zu zweit. Mit mehr Personen habe ich es nicht ausprobiert. Möchte ich auch gar nicht, denn dann könnte es wuselig werden.
Wer nicht weiterkommt, kann Hinweise erhalten.
Eine kurze Beichte zum Schluss: Ja, ich habe – beim Rätsel, das eine Paralleluniversen-Geschichte als Comic erzählt – zwischendurch mal gelugt, ob die Rückseiten zweier Plättchen zusammenpassen würden. Aber nicht oft. Zudem ich habe ich nicht die Hilfe der Hinweiskarten in Anspruch genommen. Mit einer Ausnahme vielleicht. Am spannendsten war es stets, als Belohnung das fertige Bild auf der Rückseite zu entdecken. Wie beim LÜK-Kasten.
Behind | Strohmann Games | Cédric Millet | 1 oder mehr Personen | ab 10 Jahren | 45 bis 90 Minuten | Meine Bewertung: ★★★★☆ (stark)
A few years ago, I played and very much enjoyed a cool little solitaire WWII card-driven game called Campaign: Fall Blau from Catastrophe Games and designer Martin Melbardis where the player attempted to breach the Soviet defenses on the East Front in the pivotal German summer campaign of 1942. The game system is very playable and simple, but has some strategic depth to it as the player has to make a lot of choices about what to go after, how to manage their scarce resources (fuel) and what generals to use to take advantage of their special abilities to amass enough VP to claim victory over the Soviet Union. They now have the counter punch of that game in a new entry in the series called Campaign: Operation Bagration and it is currently being offered on Kickstarter.
Grant: Welcome back to the blog Martin. What is your current game Campaign: Operation Bagration?
Martin: Thanks for having me back! Campaign: Operation Bagration is the long-awaited successor to my very first published game, Campaign: Fall Blau and tells the story of the Soviet offensive in 1944 to take back the occupied center of Russia gained by the Germans during Operation Barbarossa and is based on the successful Campaign: Fall Blau game system.
Grant: What was your design goal with the game?
Martin: My design goal for Campaign:Operation Bagration was to switch perspectives to the Soviet side using my tried-and-tested Campaign Game System. I wanted players to take command of the Soviets during one of the most devastating offensives of the war….Operation Bagration, which tore through German Army Group Center in 1944. From a design standpoint, I found it very rewarding to adapt new game mechanics and ideas to fit this pivotal WWII Campaign on the Eastern Front, while keeping the core of the system intact.
Grant:What are the hallmarks of this solitaire Campaign Series?
Martin: I’d say a minimalist approach to wargaming. Very streamlined, using only cards, dice, and cubes, with a 6–7 page rulebook. These are light solitaire wargames designed to be fast and furious with no extra fat or bloat, especially when compared to more traditional hex-and-counter wargames that can take hours to play.
Grant: As a follow up to Campaign: Fall Blau, what do you believe you have improved in the gaming experience?
Martin: While the system as a whole is more or less exactly the same as Fall Blau, I injected some new ideas into the experience to better reflect the historical realities of this campaign. The core game, such as defeating Campaign Cards, the Order system and how Generals work, will remain familiar to players of Fall Blau, but the feel is distinctly different.
Grant: What elements from Operation Bagration did you need to model in the design?
Martin: Operation Bagration was a completely different beast to tackle than Fall Blau. In addition to taking control of the Soviet army this time around, the mountainous regions of the Caucasus region have been replaced with the swamps of Belorussia and Poland. You’re also facing a much weaker and mostly static German Army Group Center, desperately trying to rebuild a frontline and stop the Soviet advance from swarming into their rear echelons. This is represented by the new “Rebuild Frontlines” rule, which replaces the old “Local Counter-Attacks” rule from Fall Blau. In Bagration, counter-attacks are now only triggered by Event Cards representing Panzer Divisions trying to blunt the Soviet offensive. In fact, the entire Event Deck has been changed to reflect the research I did on Operation Bagration with all sorts of cool ideas popping up on how to reflect the history, units and tactics of this Campaign.
Grant: As a solitaire game, what type of experience does the game create?
Martin: The game system prides itself on being fast, easy to learn but hard to master. It creates a very similar experience to Fall Blau such as tough decisions weighing the player down each turn on how to best use your limited Orders and finding the right balance between Attacking, Advancing, or stopping for Logistics to catch up.
Grant: What is the goal of the player?
Martin: The goal is to capture enough Campaign Cards before the game ends and earn enough Victory Points from those Campaign Cards to reach the victory or even the Brilliant Victory threshold.
Grant: How does the player go about choosing and managing their Generals?
Martin: Each game starts with the player choosing three Soviet Generals. All of these generals are historically accurate, with options such as Bagramyan, Konev, Rokossovsky, and a few others. Each General has the generic “Hero of the Soviet Union” special ability plus one unique ability. Additionally, each General leads a certain type of army: either a Tank army or a regular Infantry army. Tank armies have fewer manpower cubes but benefit from added mobility, which helps them bring more Campaign Cards to the frontline when using the Advance Order. Infantry armies, on the other hand, have more “meat” and thus more manpower cubes to absorb losses. Each General also has a set number of cubes representing their starting strength in manpower and available forces. Managing your Generals comes down to picking a balanced mixture and using each general’s individual strengths (number of cubes and abilities) to maximum effect.
Grant: What unique abilities do the different Generals possess?
Martin: As mentioned, each General has the “Hero of the Soviet Union” special ability, which allows you to discard a red cube to re-roll a single die. This represents the Soviet ability to historically take massive casualties and still push on. On top of that, each General also has a unique ability reflecting their historical traits. For example, General Bagramyan is an offensive-minded General, while Rokossovsky was known to always plan two steps ahead and this is represented by his ability to draw extra cards from the Event Deck.
Grant: What type of events does the Event Deck contain?
Martin: In addition to the Campaign Cards, the Event Deck is really where the historical aspects of the Bagration Campaign really come to life. I made sure to only include Soviet and German units and tactics that were instrumental to the Bagration campaign. The Event Deck contains mostly cards that help you during the game, such as attached Soviet units like the 3rd Guards Cavalry Corps, which can help you exploit the flanks of the German frontline by removing adjacent defenses, or the 4th Tank Army, which grants extra attack dice when attacking a Campaign Card. These cards not only add flavor to the game but also a strong sense of historical flavor.
Grant: What are the different type of German effects included in the Event Deck?
Martin: The Event Deck also contains cards that hurt the player, such as German Panzer divisions that trigger a counter-attack when drawn, or German reinforcement cards that add additional German cubes to active Campaign Cards on the frontlines. In addition, things like German bombers or bad weather can and will slow your progress.
Grant: What Actions/Orders are available to the player?
Martin: There are three available Orders each turn, and you may perform one per General. The Advance Order (costs 1 supply) brings unlocked Campaign Cards to the frontline. Once a card is on the frontline, an Attack Order (also costs supplies) can be used to attack and remove any cubes (representing German formations or defenses) on that card in order to capture it and gain the VP listed on the card. Finally, the Logistics Order adds supplies and reinforces a General with a cube to replace losses.
Grant: How do they manage their Supplies? How can they obtain additional fuel?
Martin: As mentioned, each Advance and Attack Order costs supplies, and the Logistics Order replenishes supplies as well as lost manpower cubes from attacking. Finding the right balance and knowing when to rest using a Logistics Order instead of Attacking or Advancing is very important. However, resting too long will slow your progress, as the clock is always counting down. A General who uses the Logistics Order adds two supplies to your shared supply pool and adds a single manpower cube to their card.
Grant: How do they manage to defeat the various Campaign Cards?
Martin: After using the Advance Order to bring an unlocked Campaign Card to the frontline in front of a General’s Card, that Campaign Card then immediately deploys a number of grey cubes (listed on the card) onto itself. The card is now available to be attacked using the Attack Order. When you attack, you pay supplies then calculate the number of cubes on the attacking General’s Card and roll that many dice. You need rolls of 4+ to remove a single white (defense) or grey (German units) cube from the Campaign Card. Some Campaign Cards such as fortress cities (Festerplatz) or swamps reduce the attack dice by -1. Rolls of 1–2 result in your General losing a manpower cube (red cube). Once all German cubes are removed from the Campaign Card, it is considered captured and removed from the frontline, and you gain the Victory Points listed on the card. Capturing Campaign Cards also unlocks additional Campaign Cards.
Grant: How do the German forces fight back?
Martin: This time around, the Germans are much more static than in Fall Blau, which better reflects the historical situation in 1944. While you may still lose manpower cubes through bad rolls on Attack Orders, counter-attacks are now only triggered through Event Cards. A Panzer Division drawn as an event will immediately counter-attack by deploying to the frontline and attacking the General directly in front of it. There’s also the Operation Doppelkopf Event Card, which is placed near the end of the Event Deck during setup and represents a large German offensive action late in Operation Bagration, designed to blunt Soviet momentum.
Grant: What strategy should the player use to do well?
Martin: Pick a good, balanced mixture of Generals and learn when to attack versus when to build up supplies and manpower through the Logistics Order. Using Generals with Tank Army abilities to bring multiple Campaign Cards to the frontlines helps a lot but too many Tank Generals will lower your overall manpower total. Also, optimize your use of Event Cards to either prioritize Attacks or to regain manpower cubes. Overall, calculated risk management is the single most important factor in the game.
Grant: What different options are built in to make the game more of a challenge?
Martin: The game is already pretty challenging, but we are also currently planning on developing a Hard-Mode for the Kickstarter that adds 4–5 additional very difficult Event Cards to the deck for those players who love challenges or are even simply masochists.
Grant: What are you most pleased about with the design?
Martin: I’m pleased with the way I’ve adapted the old Fall Blau Game System to incorporate new game mechanics and Events to reflect the different historical aspects of Bagrations’ unique Campaign. Such things such as the German’s use of blocking detachments to try to stop the Soviet steamroller with whatever they could (represented by the rebuilding the frontline mechanic), and the use of Festerplatze or Fortress cities in Belorussia to hold at all cost. Added to this is the liberal use of Soviet tactics such as mine sweeping tanks, the massive God of War bombardment to signal the start of Bagration, Maskirovka deception techniques and American lend-lease trucks to help the Offensive are all well-represented in the game through the Event Deck.
Grant: What has been the response of playtesters?
Martin: Early on, I got some great and positive responses from playtesters when I initially designed the game. Later, I handed off playtesting and development to Catastrophe Games, who further developed the game and ran additional playtests. I’ve heard good things from them as well.
Grant: What other historical campaigns might the series delve into?
Martin: Next up, I am planning to adapt the series to either the North African or the Pacific Theaters in WWII. I also strangely find that representing the Japanese early-war successes against the Allies in the Philippines, Hong Kong, Indonesia and Singapore a very interesting twist and is a subject rarely touched upon in wargaming. This could also be a good option in the future but who really knows where my creativity can take me?
Grant: What other designs are you currently working on?
Martin: As always, I am continuing to design lighter Print & Play wargames with my own independent company, Solo Wargame. I usually release a new wargame every two months or so on Kickstarter and want to continue that trend with a WWII wargame about commanding a Soviet battalion during the Battle of Stalingrad in 1942. I also plan to release a new version of my continuing series on WW2 Roll & Write games, this time focusing on the Torch landings in North Africa in 1942–43 with new ideas about convoy interdiction, diplomacy with the Vichy government and eventually pushing the Germans all the way to Tunisia. Like most other creatives, I honestly have way too many ideas and too little time!
Thanks so much once again for having me on!
If you are interested in learning more about the Campaign Series and how it works, you can watch my preview video for the Campaign: Fall Blau Kickstarter from 2022 at the following link:
Plastic bricks were a key part of my childhood. I have fond memories of tearing up my hands rummaging through a big tub of bricks that may or may not have actually held the one piece that I was searching for. Over time, my siblings and I developed amazing characters and lore of the hijinks that happened in our brick-world, leading me to naturally want to share that with my kids as they grow up. Epic Brick Adventures is designed to couple the world of bricks with the world of roleplaying games to facilitate creativity and storytelling without any age limitations. Ahead of the Kickstarter, I was able to get a look at the Introductory Guide and the Circus Catastrophe Intro Adventure to see if this game is more than just D&D with bricks.
Epic Brick Adventures: Building You Up
Epic Brick Adventures provides a rules framework for players to use their existing collections of bricks and plastic figures in a roleplaying game setting. Minifigures become MiniHeroes as a Brickmaster leads the players through an adventure of their own devising, serving as the Gamemaster (in conventional parlance).
MiniHeroes have Abilities broken out into Creative, Smarts, Willpower, Sense, Muscle, and Zip with concepts of Gusto and Clutch replacing energy and hit points respectively. Tack on an Occupation and some basic equipment…
The Battle of Champion Hill game is called The Road to Vicksburg and uses the Blue & Gray System. It was included in Strategy & Tactics Magazine Issue #103.
The May 16, 1863 Battle of Champion Hill was the largest, bloodiest, and most significant action of Grant’s Vicksburg Campaign. 32,000 advancing Union soldiers met 23,000 Confederates in a fierce struggle for a vital crossroads roughly halfway between Vicksburg and Jackson, Mississippi. The field was dominated by bald Champion Hill, from which Confederate artillery opened fire on the Union army at 9:45 A.M. The first Federal assault on the hill drove the Southerners back with bayonets and clubbed muskets. As the Union soldiers tried to reform and consolidate their gains, they were swept away by a counterattack led by John Bowen’s Missourians and Arkansans. Ulysses S. Grant ordered more men towards the hill and Bowen’s Confederates were themselves driven off, compelling a general retreat. Southern Brig. Gen. Lloyd Tilghman was killed while directing a desperate rearguard action that enabled most of the Confederate army to escape towards Vicksburg. The decisive Union victory at Champion Hill was instrumental in forcing the Confederates out of the open field and into a doomed position inside the walls of Vicksburg.
Was habe ich gespielt? boardgamearena.com: Die Burgen von Burgund, Postcards, Tipperary, Perfect Words Blood on the Clocktower Trekking: Reise durch die Zeit VOLT Piña Coladice Cat Trick
boardgamearena.com: Die Burgen von Burgund, Postcards, Tipperary, Perfect Wordsboardgamearena.com: Die Burgen von Burgund, Postcards, Tipperary, Perfect Wordsboardgamearena.com: Die Burgen von Burgund, Postcards, Tipperary, Perfect Wordsboardgamearena.com: Die Burgen von Burgund, Postcards, Tipperary, Perfect WordsBlood on the ClocktowerTrekking: Reise durch die ZeitVOLTPiña ColadiceCat Trick
In unserem Format „Tipp um Tipp“ laden wir euch ein, mit uns zu quizzen. Wir beschreiben Euch einmal pro Woche in 15 bis 20 Hinweisen ein Brettspiel. Wie schnell bekommt Ihr es heraus? Am Ende gibt es direkt die Auflösung.
Schreibt uns gerne, wie Euch das Quiz gefällt oder sagt einfach hallo.… [Weiterlesen]
Postcards von Eric Dubus und Simon Kayne – erschienen bei Elznir Games Im Jahr 2025 beförderte die Deutsche Post rund 96 Millionen Postkarten. Als Vergleich dazu: im Jahr 2017 waren es rund 195 Millionen Postkarten. Das ist einerseits ein enormer Rückgang, andererseits bin ich aber überrascht, dass überhaupt noch so viele Postkarten versendet werden. Somit besitzt POSTCARDS also […]
The Last Spell: The Board Game is one of those rare games that I can be unapologetically negative about. Contrary to what you might think reading some of my reviews, while I can be critical, I generally try to understand what the design was attempting to accomplish and if it accomplished that goal.
The Last Spell: The Board Game successfully accomplishes the aim of adapting a video game into a board game at what appears to be a 1:1 level of fidelity. Unfortunately, because of this, there is almost zero reason to play the board game adaptation.
This game is a waste of time.
Is there a good thing, Thomas?
Well, the aesthetics are kinda cool. I guess?
The premise of the game is that some wizards cast a big spell that killed nearly everything in the world, and the remnants group together in small towns bravely defending themselves against the dying of the light or some such thing. There’s purple mist. There’s a pixel art style that is very Dark Super Nintendo. Reminds me a bit of Super Boss Monster, and the text is reasonably easy to read. The miniatures for the player heroes are cool.
Unfortunately, beyond that, everything else is a travesty.
Operation Dragoon: The 2nd D-Day Solitaire Travel Game is a fast-playing corps and division-level operational solitaire game of the Operation Dragoon campaign from the initial invasion that hit the beaches on August 15th to the conclusion of the decisive Battle of Montelimar on August 29th.
As the Allies of the US VI Corps, French II Corps, and US/British/Canadian 1st Airborne Task Force advance, a column of German units of the Nineteenth Army, led by the powerful 11th Panzer Division, is marching up the Rhone River valley to escape envelopment and destruction at Montelimar.
The Allied player, aided by air support and bands of French Forces of the Interior (FFI), must eliminate as many German divisions as possible while ensuring the critical ports of Marseilles and Toulon are quickly seized.
When I say spoiler-free, I mean up to the point when you start your first game. That means by then you will have opened the first mission box and you will see what's inside. If that's fine by you, come join me to take a look at what's in Regicide Legacy, the legacy game version of the amazing cooperative card game Regicide from Badgers from Mars, New Zealand. I'm a big fan of Regicide
Fortunes of Scoundrel Bay has, on the surface, everything that makes me typically dismiss the latest eurogame from the assembly line: It’s clearly inspired by Alexander Pfister’s Maracaibo and Boonlake, it has questionably silly cover art, and maybe one of the most generic and forgettable “this is a pirate game” names of all time (honestly, we accidentally called it “Scoundrels of Fortune Bay, Bay of Scoundrels, Founders of Fortune Bay, etc.)
I was surprised to just have a great time with Fortunes of Scoundrel Bay (FoSB). It’s always a treat to be delighted by the mechanical flourishes in a design, and this one has plenty of thoughtful choices that come together in a surprisingly mid-weight package.
We’re pirates, yar, but we’re also homebodies
Fortunes of Scoundrel Bay has an interesting rhythm compared to many games that feature seafaring as a central theme. Instead of sail, sail, sail, you are often sailing 1 or 2 spaces, then you’re doing a bunch of different activities for several rounds, then you might sail another space. The arrangement of the board is the shape of a bay, rather than a large expanse of ocean, and this is reflected in how the game plays. You’re more of a pirate party barge than a terrifying group of cutthroats. These pirates love to hang.
Manchmal braucht es für einen guten Plan nur zwei Dinge: einen cleveren Kopf – und einen Komplizen. Genau darum geht es in „The Glasgow Train Robbery“ von Salt & Pepper Games. Das kooperative Brettspiel für zwei Personen lief kürzlich auf Gamefound – und der Coup ist gelungen: Die Kampagne konnte über 40.000 Euro einsammeln und mehr als 400 Unterstützer überzeugen.
Für mich persönlich war das übrigens ein eher ungewöhnlicher Klick auf den „Back“-Button. Crowdfunding funktioniert für mich inzwischen nur noch in sehr engen Grenzen. Zu viele Projekte, zu lange Wartezeiten, zu viele Deluxe-Varianten. „The Glasgow Train Robbery“ gehörte aber zu den wenigen Kampagnen der letzten Zeit, die ich tatsächlich unterstützt habe. Aber das Thema, das Artwork und der Fakt, dass es ein kooperatives Spiel für zwei ist, hat mich einfach überzeugt mal wieder ein Projekt zu unterstützen. Davon abgesehen mag ich die Spiel von Salt and Pepper Games sehr. Auch deren letztes Spiel Onoda hatte ich bereits unterstützt und der Verlag ist u.a. auch für diese besonders ausgefallenen Solo-Spiele (u.a. Conservas) bekannt. Aber auch Spiele für zwei sind eine Spezialität des Verlages.
Warum genau ich auf Crowdfunding nicht mehr so gut zu sprechen bin, darüber habe ich übrigens auch ausführlich mit Uli Blennemann von Spielworxx gesprochen – im „Beyond the Table“-Podcast. In der Episode geht es unter anderem darum, warum Crowdfunding für viele Spieler inzwischen schwieriger geworden ist und welche Projekte trotzdem noch überzeugen können.
Der historische Hintergrund
Die Vorlage für das Spiel ist übrigens einer der berühmtesten Kriminalfälle Großbritanniens. In den frühen Morgenstunden des 8. August 1963 stoppte eine Bande einen Postzug auf der Strecke von Glasgow nach London. Mithilfe manipulierten Signals wurde der Zug an einer abgelegenen Stelle zum Halten gebracht, die Crew überwältigt und gezielt der Geldtransport-Waggon geplündert.
Die Beute betrug rund 2,6 Millionen Pfund, damals eine astronomische Summe. Das entspricht heutzutage in etwa einem Gegenwert von etwa 80 Millionen Euro. Doch obwohl der Coup zunächst perfekt verlief und ohne einen einzigen Schuss abzugeben, verrieten sich einige der Täter später selbst – unter anderem durch Fingerabdrücke, die sie beim Spielen von Monopoly in ihrem Versteck hinterließen. Klingt wie ein schlechter Witz ist aber wahr. Und einer der bekanntesten Gauner Großbritanniens hatte seine Finger im Spiel (im wahrsten Sinne des Wortes) – Ronald Biggs. Dem gelang nach seiner Inhaftierung die Flucht und er lebte 35 Jahre im Ausland, u.a. lange Zeit in Brasilien. Doch 2001 kehrte er zurück nach Großbritannien, wo er 2013 auch starb. Natürlich gibt es zig Dokumentationen zu dem Überfall und einige Verfilmungen, die vom Raub inspiriert wurden oder diesen zum Vorbild hatten. Hervorzuheben ist aus deutsche Sicht der Film Die Gentlemen bitten zur Kasse mit Horst Tappert und Kurt Conradi, der unter dem Namen Arthur Finegan Ronald Biggs verkörperte.
Ein Zugüberfall für genau zwei Personen
Diese Geschichte bildet die Grundlage für „The Glasgow Train Robbery“, ein kooperatives Spiel speziell für zwei Personen. Dabei übernehmen beide Spielende unterschiedliche Rollen innerhalb der Bande:
Coordinator – das strategische Gehirn im Safehouse, das den Plan organisiert und Ressourcen verteilt
Operator – der Mensch draußen an den Gleisen, der den Plan tatsächlich umsetzt
Besonders spannend: Kommunikation ist stark eingeschränkt. Spieler dürfen nur über bestimmte Aktionen ein paar Worte austauschen – ansonsten müssen Bewegungen, Karten und Entscheidungen als Hinweise interpretiert werden. Ein bisschen Gedankenlesen gehört also zum perfekten Coup.
Der Plan in fünf Schritten
Der Überfall selbst läuft über mehrere Plan-Karten, die die echten Schritte des historischen Coups widerspiegeln:
Signale manipulieren
den Zug stoppen und die Crew überwältigen
die Lok bewegen
das Geld umladen
mit dem Fluchtfahrzeug verschwinden
Währenddessen tickt ständig die Uhr: Jede Aktion kostet Zeit und der Zug bewegt sich unaufhaltsam Richtung London. Gleichzeitig sorgen unerwartete Ereignisse und mögliche Spuren – etwa Fingerabdrücke – dafür, dass der perfekt geplante Coup schneller eskalieren kann als gedacht.
Stretch Goals und Extras
Die Gamefound-Kampagne brachte auch einige zusätzliche Inhalte. Freigeschaltete Stretch Goals erweitern das Spiel unter anderem um zusätzliche Karten und Varianten, die neue Herausforderungen in den Ablauf des Überfalls bringen und für mehr Wiederspielwert sorgen.
Zugüberfall zum Mitnehmen
Neben dem klaren Fokus auf zwei Spieler punktet das Spiel auch mit seiner kompakten Box. Damit eignet sich „The Glasgow Train Robbery“ perfekt für unterwegs – egal ob im Urlaub, im Café oder (stilgerecht) im Zug.
Das Spiel befindet sich bereits in Produktion (Crowdfunding mal wieder „nur“ Marketing) und sollte dann auch pünktlich eintreffen, sofern es keine Komplikationen bei der Verschiffung gibt. Aus Sicherheitsgründen hat man von einem Versand per Zug abgesehen… 🙂 Einen Late Pledge wird es somit wohl nicht geben, aber ich bin mir sicher, dass man das Spiel zeitnah erwerben kann.
Asmodee arm Fantasy Flight Games is discontinuing the latest iteration of its veteran dungeon crawler Descent, citing rising manufacturing costs, “global economic shifts” and the expense of developing the game’s companion app.
All three games featured large amounts of plastic miniatures, cardboard terrain pieces and map tiles, while Legends of the Dark also leaned into an integrated companion app to help manage campaigns and individual scenarios.
A statement from FFG announcing the end of the game said, “Simply put, the game is too expensive to make. Between ever-increasing manufacturing costs, lengthy and pricey app development timelines, and global economic shifts making everything more expensive to produce, it became abundantly clear that continuing to make this game is just not feasible.
“This is far from the outcome we wanted – again, we all love this game and hoped to see it grow for years to come – but even if we were to sell every last copy, we would still ultimately be doing so at a loss.
“In a fiercely-competitive board game industry, that simply isn’t sustainable, and because of circumstances outside of FFG’s control, there are no adjustments we could make that could lower costs enough to continue printing the game.”
Standees from Frosthaven || Photo credit: Cephalofair Games
Other competitors in the space have included CMON’s Massive Darkness series – based on its huge-selling Zombicide system – which has raised more than $10m acrossa trio ofcrowdfunds since 2017.
Using crowdfunding for those large-scale, component-heavy games has helped publishers Cephalofair and CMON reduce the risk of developing expensive titles by being able to accurately gauge demand, as well as receiving financial backing for the projects up front.
Even with that data, however, both publishers have run into problems amid the heavy global economic uncertainty over the last couple of years – especially around volatile US tariff policy aimed at countries such as China, where the vast majority of board games are manufactured.
Asmodee has almost entirely avoided crowdfunding for its own games to date, with its only launched campaign believed to be Lookout Games’ Kickstarter for the Grand Austria Hotel: Let’s Waltz! Expansion & Deluxe Upgrade, which raised about €383,000 during the coronavirus pandemic in 2020.
Its only other prior exposure to crowdfunding is thought to be via the company Exploding Kittens, in which it made a strategic investment short of a buyout in 2021. That business has since raised more than $977,000 in a Kickstarter campaign for Hand to Hand Wombat the following year.
Its statement about the end of Descent: Legends of the Dark said, “While we don’t have anything to share at this time, there is always a possibility that we will revisit Descent in the future.
“It would take a different form and would not be Legends of the Dark, but this game universe is near and dear to FFG’s heart.
“The future is always uncertain, and even though we have to close the book on Descent today, we hope that, someday, we’ll be able to dream big with it again.”
FFG’s other major titles currently include collectible card game Star Wars Unlimited, ‘living card games’ Marvel Champions and Arkham Horror: The Card Game, heavyweight space opera board game Twilight Imperium and veteran bluffing and negotiation game Cosmic Encounter.
The company said that although Act III of Descent: Legends of the Dark is no longer in development, the company would continue to support the game’s companion app for the first two acts of the game, albeit without any new content being added.
In February Artefacts Studio unveiled Terrinoth: Heroes of Descent, a video game set in the Descent universe which FFG said “captures the classic dungeon-crawl feeling of the Descent board games in a whole new medium”.
Asmodee co-founder Philippe Mouret and Catan Studio head Pete Fenlon have both stepped back from their high-level roles at the board game giant, with Julia Marcelin and Mike Bisogno stepping up to oversee some of its biggest-selling titles as part of the leadership transition.
Mouret, who co-founded Asmodee more than 30 years ago, was also behind the creation of Splendor publisher Space Cowboys in 2014, and has overseen multiple publishing studios at the business over the years.
Julia Marcelin, who has been with Asmodee for almost seven years, becomes head of five studios as part of the shake-up, taking on responsibility for Days of Wonder, Space Cowboys, Repos Production, Libellud and Next Move.
Marcelin has spent the last year working with Mouret as deputy head of studio in preparation for the transition, Asmodee said, following previous responsibilities in operational strategy and international transformation at the business.
A statement from Asmodee said Mouret had “played a defining role in shaping the company’s creative direction”, as well as “contributed to the development and creation of some of the industry’s most celebrated titles”.
The company said Mouret would “remain closely involved” with its publishing team, working alongside chief product officer Jean-Sébastien De Barros and senior vice president for tabletop Benoit Clerc.
Asmodee also revealed that Pete Fenlon has stepped down as head of Catan Studio after ten years, with his LinkedIn page now updated to place him as “storyteller” and “mentor at large” at the company.
Former Catan Studio head Pete Fenlon
Mike Bisogno, who joined Asmodee three months ago after more than 17 years at Spin Master, takes on the role. He was most recently senior director of design and inventor relations at Spin Master, and also previously worked as a licensing lead at the company.
The game has sold more than 45 million copies and been translated into over 40 languages to date. Asmodee announced a 6th edition of the game last year to coincide with the title’s 30th anniversary.
A statement from Asmodee said, “Mike combines creative leadership with a strong track record of building successful partnerships. His arrival reflects Asmodee’s commitment to sustaining Catan’s legacy while exploring new opportunities for growth.”
It added, “Pete has left an enduring mark on the industry, with a career spanning several decades, including 20 years as CEO and chairman of Mayfair Games, and being a force behind the growth and global success of Catan.
New Catan Studio head Mike Bisognio
“Since joining Asmodee in 2016 to lead Catan Studio, he led the brand through significant expansion and innovation.”
Jean-Sébastien De Barros, chief product officer and executive vice president for publishing at Asmodee, said, “Asmodee has always been built on the strength of its people. I see both Philippe and Pete as mentors for our new generation of Asmodee publishing team members.
“They have each played a pivotal role in shaping not only our portfolio but also the culture of Asmodee, one which resonates with so many players today.
“I’m glad to have shared part of my journey with them and we are confident in the next generation of leaders we’re bringing to these positions as they bring the right energy to continue building on this legacy.”
The board game giant said buying ATM, the publisher of titles including Speed Bac/Quickstop, Mouton Mouton and Pili Pili, was predicated on social games being “the fastest growing category of the board games market”.
The ATM deal followed five other acquisitions from the past 12 months – including the buyout of Japon Brand from CMON, anchoring the board game giant’s push into a “currently untapped market” for the company.